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HE
WORLD is nothing but variety and dissemblance. Vices are all alike,
inasmuch
as they are all vices: And so do haply the Stoikes meane it. But
though
they are equally vices, they are not equall vices; and that hee who
hath
started a hundred steps beyond the limits
Quos ultra
citraque
nequit consistere rectum, --Hor. i. Sat. i. 107.
On this side, or
beyond the
which
No man can hold a right
true pitch,
is not of worse condition
than
he that is ten steps short of it, is no whit credible: and that
sacrilege
is not worse than the stealing of a colewort out of a garden.
Nec vincet
ratio,
tantumdem ut peccet, idemque, Qui teneros caules
alieni
fregerit horti, Et qui nocturnus
divum
sacra legerit. -- Sat. iii. 115
No reason can evict,
as great
or same sinne taints
Him that breakes in
anothers
Garden tender plants,
And him that steales by
night things consecrate to Saints.
There is as much
diversity
in that as in any other thing. The confusion of order and measure of
crimes
is dangerous: Murtherers, Traitors and Tyrants, have too much gaine by
it: it is no reason their conscience should be eased, in that some
other
is either idle or lascivious, or lesse assiduous unto devotion. Every
man
poiseth upon his fellowes sinne, and elevates his owne. Even teachers
do
often range it ill in my conceit. As Socrates said, that the
chiefest
office of wisdome was to distinguish goods and evils. We others, to
whom
the best is ever in vice, should say the like of knowledge, to
distinguish
vices. Without which, and that very exact, both vertuous and wicked men
remaine confounded and unknowen. Now drunkennesse amongst others,
appeareth
to mee a grose and brutish vice. The minde hath more part else where;
and
some vices there are, which (if it may lawfully be spoken) have a kinde
of I wot not what generosity in them. Some there are,, that have
learning,
diligence, valour, prudence, wit, cunning, dexterity, and subtlety
joyned
with them; whereas this is merely corporall, and terrestriall. And the
grosest and rudest nation, that liveth amongst us at this day, is only
that which keepeth it in credit. Other vices but alter and distract the
understanding, whereas this utterly subverteth the same, and astonieth
the body.
---- cum
vini
vis penetravit, Consequitur gravitas
membrorum, præpediuntur Crura vacillanti,
tardescit
lingua, madet mens, Nant oculi, clamor,
sigultis,
jurgia gliscunt. -- Lucr. iii. 479.
When once the force
of wine
hath inly pierst,
Limbes-heavinesse is
next,
legs faine would goe,
But reeling cannot,
tongue
drawles, mindes disperst,
Eyes swimme, ciries,
hickups,
brables grow.
The worst estate of
man,
is where he loseth the knowledge and government of himselfe. And
amongst
other things, it is, said, that as must wine boyling and working in a
vessell,
workes and sends upward what ever it containeth in the bottome, so doth
wine cause those that drinke excessively of it, worke up, and breake
out
their most concelaed secrets.
----tu
sapientium Curas, et arcanum
jocoso Consilium retegis
Lyæo. --
Hor. iii. Od. xxi.
14.
Thou (wine-cup) doest
by
wine reveale
The cares, which wise
men
would conceale,
And close drifts, at a
merry
meale.
Josephus reporteth
that by making an Ambassador to tipple-square, whom his enemies had
sent
unto him, he wrested all his secrets out of him. Neverthelesse Augustus
having trusted Lucius Piso, that conquered Thrace, with
the
secretest affaires he had in hand, had never cause to be discontented
with
him; nor Tiberius with Cossus, to whom he imparted all
his
seriousest counsels, although we know them both to have so given
themselves
to drinking of wine that they were often faine to be carried from the
Senat,
and both were reputed notable drunkards.
--------
Hesterno
inflatum venas de moreLyæo -- Virg. Buc. Ec.
vi.
15.
Veines pufft up, as
it used
alway
By wine which was dranke
yesterday.
And as faithfully
as
the complot and purpose to kill Cæsar committed unto Cimber,
who would daily be drunke with quaffing of wine, as unto Cassius,
that drunke nothing but water, whereupon he answered very pleasantly,
'What! shall I bear a tyrant that am not able to beare wine?' We
see
our carowsing tospot German souldiers, when they are most plunged in
their
cups and as drunke as rats, to have perfect remembrance of their
quarter,
of the watchword, and of their files.
--------
Nec
facilis victoria de madidis, et Bloesis, atque mero
titubantibus.
-- Juven. Sat. xv. 47.
Nor is the conquest
easie
of men sow'st,
Lisping and reeling with
wine they carow'st.
I would never have
beleeved
so sound, so deepe and so excessive drunkennesse had I not read in
histories
that Attalus having envited to sup with him (with intent to doe
him some notable indignity) the same Pausanias who for the same
cause killed afterward Philip, King of Macedon (a king,
who
by the eminent faire qualities that were in him, bore a testimonie of
the
education he had learned in the house and company of Epaminondas),
made him so dead-drunke that insensibly and without feeling he might
prostitute
his beauty as the body of a common hedge-harlot, to Mulettiers, Groomes
and many of the abject servants of his house. And what a lady (whom I
much
honour and highly esteeme) told mee, protesting that neere Bourdeaux,
towards Castres, where her house is, a widdow country-woman,
reputed
very chaste and honest, suspecting herselfe to be with childe, told her
neighbours that had she a husband she should verily thinke she was with
childe; but the occasion of this suspition increasing more and more,
and
perceiving herseIfe so big-bellied that she could no longer conceale
it,
she resolved to make the Parish-priest acquainted with it, whom she
entreated
to publish in the Church that whosover hee were that were guilty of the
fact, and would avow it, she would freely forgive him, and if hee were
so pleased, take him to her husband. A certaine swaine or hyne-boy of
hers,
emboldened by this proclamation, declared how that having one holliday
found her welltippled with wine, and so sound asleep by the chimnie
side
lying so fit and ready for him, without awaking her he had the full use
of her body. Whom she accepted for her husband, and both live together
at this day. It is assured that antiquitie hath not greatly described
this
vice. The compositions of diverse Philosophers speake but sparingly of
it. Yea, and some of the Stoikes deeme it not amisse for man sometimes
to take his liquor roundly, and drinke drunke, thereby to recreate his
spirits.
Hoc quoque
virtutum
quondam certamine magnum Socratem
pa lmam promeruisse ferunt. -- Cor. Gal. El. i.
They say, in this
too, Socrates
the wise,
And great in vertues
combats,
bare the prize.
Cato, that
strict
censurer and severe corrector of others, hath beene reproved for much
drinking,
Narratur et
prisci
Catonis Saepe mero coluisse virtus. -- Hor. iii. Od.
xxi.
11.
'Tis said, by use of
wine
repeated
Old Catoes vertue oft
was
heated.
Cyrus, that
so
far-renowned king, amongst his other commendations, meaning to preferre
himselfe before his brother Artaxerxes, and get the start of
him,
aleageth that he could drinke better and tipple more than he. And
amongst
the best policed and formalest nations, the custome of drinking and
pledging
of healths was much in use. I have heard Silvius, that
excellelent
phisitian of Paris, affirme that to preserve the vigor of our
stomake
from, empairing, it is not amisse once a month to rowze up the same by
this excesse of drinking, and lest it should grow dull and stupid
thereby
to stirre it up. And it is written that the Persians, after
they
had well tippled, were wont to consult of their chiefest affaires. My
taste,
my rellish, and my complexion are sharper enemies unto this vice than
my
discourse, for besides that I captivatee more easily my conceits under
the auctoritie of ancient opinions, indeed I finde it to be a fond, a
stupid,
and a base kinde of vice, but lesse malicious and hurtfull than others;
all which shocke and with a sharper edge wound publike societie. And if
we cannot give ourselves any pleasure except (as they say) it cost us
something;
I finde this vice to be lesse chargeable unto our conscience than
others;
besides it is not hard to be prepared, difficult to be found; a
consideration
not to be despised. A man well advanced in years and dignitie, amongst
three principall commodities he told me to have remaining in life,
counted
this: and where shall a man more rightly finde it than amongst the
naturall?
But he tooke it ill, delicatenesse, and the choice of wines is therein
to be avoided. If you prepare your voluptuousnesse to drinke it with
pleasure
and daintily neat, you tie your selfe unto an inconvenience to drinke
it
other than is alwayes to be had. A man must have a milder, a loose and
freer taste. To be a true drinker a man should not have so tender and
squeamish
a palat. The Germans doe in a manner drinke equally of all sorts of
wine
with like pleasure. Their end is rather to gulpe it downe freely than
to
tast it kindly. And to say truth they have it better cheape. Their
voluptuousnesse
is more plenteous and fuller. Secondarily, to drinke after the French
manner,
as two droughts and moderately, is over much to restraine the favours
of
that God. There is more time and constancie required thereunto. Our
forefathers
were wont to spend whole nights in that exercise, yea often times they
joyned whole long dayes unto them. And a man must proportion his
ordinarie
more large and firme. I have in my dayes seene a principall Lord, a man
of great employment and enterprises and famous for good success, who
without
straining himselfe and eating but an ordinary meales-meate, was wont to
drinke little lesse than five pottles of wine, yet at his rising seemed
to be nothing distempered, but rather, as we have found to our no small
cost in managing our affaires, over-wise and considerate. The pleasure
of that whereof we would make account in the course of our life ought
to
be employed longer space. It were necessary, as shop-boyes or labouring
people, that we should refuse no occasion to drinke and continually to
have this desire in our minde. It seemeth that wee daily shorten the
use
of this, and that in our houses (as I have seene in mine infancie)
breakfasts,
nunchions, and beavers should be more frequent and often used than now
adayes they are. And should wee thereby in any sort proceed towards
amendment?
No verily. But it may be that we have much more given our selves over
unto
paillardise and all manner of luxurie than our fathers were. They are
two
occupations that enter-hinder one another in their vigor. On the one
side
it hath empaired and weakned our stomacke, and on the other sobrietie
serveth
to make us more jolly-quaint, lusty, and wanton for the exercise of
love
matters. It is a wonder to thinke on the strange tales I have heard my
father report of the chastitie of his time. He might well speake of it
as he that was both by art and nature proper for the use and solace of
ladies. He spake little and well, few words, but to the purpose, and
was
ever wont to entermixe some ornament taken from vulgar bookes, and
above
all Spanish amongst his common speeches. And of all Spanish authors,
none
was more familiar unto him than Marcus Aurelius. His demeanour
and
carriage was ever milde, meeke, gentle, and, very modest, and above all
grave and stately. There is nothing he seemed to be more carefull of
than
of his honesty, and observe a kinde of decencie of his person, and
orderly
decorum in his habits, were it on foot or on horsebacke. He was
exceeding
nice in performing his word or promise. And so strictly concscientious
and obsequious in religion, that generally he seemed to incline toward
superstition than the contrary. Though he were but a little man, his
courage
and vigor was great. He was of an upright and well proportioned
stature,
of a pleasing, cheerfull-Iooking countenance, of a swarthy hue, nimbly
addicted, and exquisitely nimble unto all noble and gentleman-like
exercises.
I have seene some hollow staves of his filled with lead which hee wont
to use and exercise his armes withall, the better to enable himselfe to
pitch the barre, to throw the sledge, to cast the pole, and to play at
fence; and shoes with leaden soles, which he wore to ensure himselfe to
leape, to vault, and to run. I may without blushing say, that in
memorie
of himselfe, he hath left certaine petie miracles amongst us. I have
seene
him when he was past threescore years of age mocke at all our sports,
and
out-countenance our youthfull pastimes, with a heavy furr'd gowne about
him to leap into his saddle. To make the pommada round about a table
upon
his thumb, and seldome to ascend any staires without skipping three or
four steps at once. And concerning my discourse, hee was wont to say
that
in a whole province there was scarce any woman of qualitie that had an
ill name. Hee would often report strange familiarities, namely of his
owne,
with very honest women, without any suspicion at all. And protested
very
religiously that when he was married he was yet a pure virgine; yet had
he long time followed the warres beyond the mountaines, and therein
served
long, whereof he hath left a Journall-booke of his owne collecting,
wherein
he hath particularly noted whatsoever happened day by day worthy the
observation
so long as he served, both for the publike and his particular use. And
he was well strucken in years when he tooke a wife. For returning out
of Italie
in the yeare of our Lord one thousand five hundred eight and twenty,
and
being full three and thirty years old by the way hee chose himselfe a
wife.
But come we to our drinking againe. The incommodities of age wbich need
some helpe and refreshing, might with some reason beget in me a desire
or longing of this faculty, for it is in a man the last pleasure which
the course of our years stealeth upon us. Good fellowes say that
naturall
heat is first taken in our feet: that properly belongeth to infancie.
From
thence it ascendeth unto the middle region, where it is setled and
contitlueth
a long time, and in mine opinion there produceth the only true and
moving
pleasures of this corporall life. Other delight and sensualities in
respect
of t hat doe but sleepe. In the end, like unto a vapour which by little
and little exhaleth and mounteth aloft, it comes unto the throat and
there
makes her last bode. Yet could I never conceive how any man may either
encrease or prolong the pleasure of drinking beyond thirst, and in his
imagination frame an artificial appetite, and against nature. My
stomacke
could not well reach so farre: it is very much troubled to come to an
end
of that which it takes for his need. My constitution is to make no
accompt
of drinking but to succeed meat, and therefore doe I ever make my last
draught the greatest. And forasmmuch as in age we have the roofe of our
mouthes covered with rhume, or distempered, distated and altered
through
some other evill constitution, wine seemeth better unto us and of a
quicker
relish, according as our pores be either more or lesse open and washed.
At least I seldome relish the same very well, except it be the first
drought
I take. Anacharsis wondered to see the Grecians drinke in
greater
glasses at the end of their meales than in the beginning. It was (as I
imagine) for the very same reason that the Germans doe it, who never
begin
to carouse but when they have well fed. Plato forbiddeth children to
drinke
any wine before they be eighteene yeares of age, and to be drunke
before
they come to forty. But to such as have once attained the age of fortie
he is content to pardon them, if they chance to delight themselves with
it, and alloweth them somwhat to blend the influence of Dionysius
in their banquets, that good God, who bestoweth cheerfulnesse upon men,
and youth unto aged men, who layeth and aswageteh the passions of the
minde,
even as yron is made flexible by the fire: and in his profitable lawes
holds drinking- meetings or quaffing companies as necessary and
commendable
(alwaies provided there be a chiefe leader amongst them to containe and
order them) drunkennesse being a good and certaine tryall of every mans
nature; and therewithall proper to give aged men the courage to make
merry
in dancing and musicke; things alowable and profitable, and such as
they
dare not undertake being sober and settled: That wine is capable to
supply
the mind with temperance and the body with health. Notwithstanding,
these
restrictions, partly borrowed of the Carthaginians, please him well.
Let
those forbeare it that are going about any expedition of warre. Let
every
magistrate and all judges abstain from it at what time they are to
execute
their charge, and to consult of publike affaires. Let none bestow the
day
in drinking, as the time that is due unto more serious negotiations,
nor
the nights wherein a man intendeth to get children. It is reported that
Stilpo
the Philosopher, finding himselfe surcharged with age, did purposely
hasten
his end by drinking of with pure wine. The like cause (though not
wittingly)
did also suffocate the vital forces, crazed through old age, of the
Philosopher Arcesilaus. But it is an old and pleasant question
whether a
wise
mans mind were like to yeeld unto the force of wine.
Si munitae
adhibet
vim sapientiæ. -- Od. xxviii. 4.
If unresisted force
it bends,
Gainst wisdome which it
selfe defends.
Unto what vanity
doth
the good opinion we have of our selves provoke us? The most temperate
and
perfectest minde of the world findes it too great a taske to keepe
herselfe
upright, lest she fall by her owne weaknesse. Of a thousand there is
not
one perfectly righteous and settled but one instant of her life, and
question
might be made whether according to her natural condition she might at
any
time be so. But to joyne constancie unto it [is] her last perfection: I
meane if nothing should shocke her; which a thousand accidents may doe.
Lucretius,
that famous Poet, may philosophie and bandie at his pleasure: Loe where
be lieth senslesse of an amorous potion. Thinkes any man that an
apoplexie
cannot as soone astonish Socrates as a poore labouring man?
Some
of them have by the force of a sicknesse forgot their own names, and a
slight hurt hath overthrown the judgement of others. Let him be as wise
as he can, in the end he is but a man; what is more fraile, more
miserable,
or more vaine? Wisdome forceth not our naturall conditions.
Sudores
itaque,
et pallorem existere toto Corpore, et infringi
linguam, vocemque aboriri Caligare, oculos,
sonari
aures, succidere art us, Denique concidere ex
animi terrore videmus. -- Lucr. iii. 155.
We see therefore,
paleness
and sweats oregrow
Our bodies, tongues doe
falter, voyce doth breake,
Eyes dazle, eares buzze,
joints doe shrinke below,
Lastly we swoune by
hart-fright,
terrours weake.
He must [s]eele his
eyes
against the blow that threateneth him; being. neere the brimme of a
precipice,
he must cry out like a child: Nature having purposed to reserve these
light
markes other aucthoritie unto herselfe, inexpugnable unto our reason,
and
to the Stoicke vertue: to teach him his mortalitie and our insipiditie.
He waxeth pale for feare, be blusheth for shame, he groaneth feeling
the
cholike, if not with a desperate and lowd-roaring voice, yet with a
low,
smothered, and hoarse-sounding noise.
Humani a se
nihil
alienum putat. -- Ter. Heaut. act. i. sc. i. 25.
He thinkes, that
nothing
strange be can
To him, that longs to
any
man.
Giddie-headed
Poets,
that faine what they list, dare not so much as discharge their Heroes
from
tears.
Sic fatur
lachrymans,
classigue immitit habemas. -- Virg. Æn. vi. 1.
So said he weeping,
and so
saide,
Himselfe hand to the
sterage
laide.
Let it suffice him
to
bridle his affections, and moderate his inclinations; for it is not in
him to beare them away. Plutarke himselfe, who is so perfect
and
excellent a judge of human actions, seeing Brutus and Torquatus
to kill their own children, remaineth doubtfull whether vertue could
reach
so far and whether such men were not rather moved by some other
passion. All actions beyond the ordinary limits are subject to some
sinister
interpretation. Forasmuch as our taste doth no more come unto that
which is above it, than to that which is under it. Let us omit that
other
sect which maketh open profession of fierceness. But when in the very
same
sect which is esteemed the most demisse, we heare the bragges of Metrodorus:
Occupavite, Fortuna, atqe cepi; omnesque aditus tuos interclusi, ut ad
me amirare non posses: (Metr. Cic. Tusc. Quest. 5.)
'Fortune,
I have prevented, caught, and overtaken thee: I have mured and ramd up
all thy passages, whereby thou mightest attaine unto mee:1 When Anaxarchus,
by the appointment of Nicocreon, the tyrant of Cipres,
being
laid along in a trough of stone, and smoten with yron sledges, ceaseth
not to crie out, 'Streeke, smite and breake; it is not Anaxarchus,
it is but his vaile you martyr so:' When we heare our martyrs in the
middst
of a flame crie aloud unto the Tyrant, 'This side is roasted enough,
chop
it, eat it, it is full roasted, now begin on the other:' When in Josephus
wee heere a child all to rent with biting snippers, and pierced with
the
breath of Antiochus, to d fie him to death, crie with a
lowde-assured
and undismaid voyce, 'Tyrant, thou losest time, loe I am still at mine
ease; where is that smarting paine, where are those torments wherewith
whilom thou didst so threaten me? My constancie doth more trouble thee
than I have feeling of thy crueltie: Oh faint hearted varlet, doest
thou
yeeld when I gather strength? Make mee to faint or shrinke, cause me to
moane or lament, force me to yeeld and sue for grace if thou canst;
encourage
thy satallities, hard en thy executioners; loe how they droope and have
no more power; arme them, strengthen them, flesh them.' Verely we must
needs confesse there is some alteration, and some furie (how holy
soever)
in those mindes, When we come unto these Stoick evasions: I had rather
be furious than voluptuous: the saying of Antisthenes, Μανειην μαλλονηησθειην (Antist. Diogen. Laert. vi. c.
1.) 'Rather would I be mad than merry;'
when Sextius telleth us, he had rather be surprised with pain
than
sensuality; when Epicurus undertakes to have the goute to
wantonize
and faune upon him, and refuseth ease and health, with a hearty
cheerefullnesse
defie all evils, and scornefully despising lesse sharpe griefs
disdaining
to grapple with them, he blithely desireth and calleth for sharper,
more
forcible and worthy of him.
Spumantemque
dari, pecora inter inertia, votis Optat aprum, aut
fulvum
descendere monte leonem: -- Virg. Æn.
iv.
158.
He wisht, mongst
hartlesse
beasts some foming Bore,
Or mountaine-Lyon would
come downe and rore;
Who would not judge
them
to be prankes of a courage removed from his wonted seate? Our minde
cannot
out of her place attaine so higb. She must quit it and raise herselfe
aloft,
and taking the bridle in her teeth, carry and transport her man so
farre,
that afterward he wonder at himselfe, and rest amazed at his actions.
As
in exploit of warre, the heat and earnestnesse of the fight doth often
provoke the noble minded souldiers to adventure on so dangerous
passages
that afterward being better advised, they are the first to wonder at
it.
As also Poets are often surprised and rapt with admiration at their
owne
labours, and forget the trace by which they pass so happy a career. It
is that which some terme a fury or madnesse in them. And as Plato
saith that a setled and reposed man doth in vaine knocke at Poesies
gate; Aristotle likewise saith that no excellent minde is
freely
exempted
from some or other entermixture of folly. And be hath reason to call
any
starting or extraordinarie conceit (how commendable soever) and which
exceedeth
our judgement and discourse, folly. Forsomuch as wisdome is an
orderly
and regular managing of the minde, and which; she addresseth with
measure,
and conducteth with proportion; and taketh her owne word for it.
Plato
disputeth thus: that the facultie of prophesying and divination is far
above us, and that when wee treat it, we must be besides ourselves: our
wisdome must be darkened and over shadowed by sleepe, by sicknesse, or
by drowzinesse; or by some celestial fury, ravished from her owne seat.